I want to bring your attention to this great site I recently
came across. The California State Parks Website is extremely informative, and even better, they have a link to coaches
on display in the state of California. Mary A. Helmich's article is extremely informative and very well researched.

Wells Fargo History Museum in Phoenix decorates
their Abbot-Downing Concord Coach for the Holiday Season

STOP IN AND VISIT. THE STAFF ARE EXTREMELY
OUTGOING AND VERY KNOWLEDGEABLE REGARDING ALL ASPECTS OF WELLS FARGO HISTORY. DON'T FORGET THE GIFT SHOP!!

The main branch of Wells Fargo, adjoining the Museum, has one
of the most beautiful Christmas trees that I have ever seen. Unfortunately, I can't provide you with a photo.
Think of the photos of White House Christmas trees - and think of something that can top those. This one can!!!

December 4, 2008

Location Unknown - Photograph Found in New Hampshire

Bachrach Photographers Label on Reverse

November 27, 2008

I always love hearing information about the Barre (MA) Abbot-Downing
Concord Coach. The Barre Massachusetts Historical Society has done wonders in such a short period of time (perhaps not
to them!) in preserving this wonderful coach. Check out their recently updated website for further information.

I want to share with you information regarding the current issue
of Historical New Hampshire, a publication of the New Hampshire Historical Society. The lead article in this issue highlights
"Coaching Parades in Bethlehem and North Conway, 1887-1896" You can purchase a copy of this issue from the NH Historical
Society. Great story - wonderful photos.

November 11, 2008

I believe this photograph was taken at a Coach Parade in Central
Park in New York City. Miss Elinor Wise, shown on top of the Coach, married the Duke de Richelieu in 1913.

PHOTO COURTESY OF JANET BALL

Stage between Spofford Lake and Keene, New Hampshire. You
can find another photo of this coach on page Updates III.

October 20, 2008

Hotel Coach - Location Unknown

October 11, 2008

Formerly on display at the Hood Museum, Hanover, New Hampshire

Off to storage - perhaps
it will be put on display again in the near future!

Courtesy C. Peter James/Photo coprighted by Hood Museum

Abbot-Downing Concord Coach in the collection of the Hood Museum,
Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH. Currently not on display.

October 1, 2008

Fryeburg (ME) Fair

September 28th - October 5, 2008

COURTESY OF AND COPYRIGHTED BY C. PETER JAMES

COURTESY OF AND COPYRIGHTED BY C. PETER JAMES

C. Peter James of the Concord Coach Society, shares photos with
visitors to this site of his recent visit to the Fryeburg Fair. This Abbot-Downing has to be one of my favorites!
It is one of the Abbot-Downing vehicles in the collection of the Marshall Family. Scroll down for further information
on them.

Please return to my main page and check out information on becoming a member
of the Concord Coach Society. Peter will be sharing a lot of photos he has taken lately of Abbot-Downing Concord Coaches
on the Concord Coach Society site. You won't find them on mine - so you better go there!!

September 19, 2008

Sneak Preview!!

Photo courtesy of and copyrighted by Concord Coach Society

The Concord Coach Society was generous enough to
provide me with this photo when they visited the Audi last Sunday. They will be adding photos to their site shortly.
Information about the Society can be found on my Home page.

September 14, 2008

West Fairlee, Vermont

Although I can't read the entire name on the coach, I can read
Thetford. I'd like to note that Henry Wells, one of the founders of Wells Fargo, was born in Thetford, VT.

September 6, 2008

New Hampshire Residents - Save the Date

COURTESY OF AND COPYRIGHTED BY CONCORD COACH SOCIETY

OPENING GALA - On September 14th at 6:00 p.m.,
the Abbot-Downing Concord Coach in the collection of the Concord Coach Society, will greet early arrivals that will be attending
the 17th Gala Variety Show that begins at 7:00 p.m. at the Audi - Concord City Auditorium, Concord, N.H.

You'll really enjoy this site. One of my favorites!
Click on the coach above for further information on their preservation of Abbot-Downing Concord Coaches, newly built Coaches
for Wells Fargo, and a very long list of quality work done for historic properties across America.

August 25, 2008

Update on the Location of this Abbot-Downing Concord Coach

This green (a popular color for hotel coaches) Abbot-Downing
Concord Coach is in the Marshall Collection, Conway, New Hampshire.

Built in 1849 or 1850, it was used from Plymouth to North Woodstock and Lincoln
for years. It was once displayed at the New Hampshire Highway Hotel. Richard Morton, who built and operated the
hotel had the coach repainted and refurbished and then gave it to his daughter Jane.

This Concord Coach was displayed at the 1965 New York World's Fair and appeared
in President Dwight Eisenhower's inaugural parade in Washington, DC.

The Concord Coach Society will be adding information
to their site later on this year as to the vehicles in the Marshall Collection, which includes a number of Abbot-Downing vehicles.
I'll keep you posted.

This is a fantastic organization and one that everyone should be familiar with. I don't want
you to click on just to see their Abbot-Downing vehicles on display, but to experience the enjoyment the citizens of New London,
NH receive in maintaining our heritage. Read the entire website, then visit, and hopefully, you'll become a member.

Click on the coach above for the website.

MOUNT WASHINGTON AUTO ROAD

Friday, August 8, 2008 is the 147th Birthday of the Mt. Washington Auto
Road. Vintage horse drawn and automotive stages will be on display. Check it out - they have one
of the most beautiful Abbot-Downing Concord Coaches you'll ever see.

Click on the link below and scroll down to my posting of August 31, 2003 for information on Concord Coaches
off to the summit.

I was under the impression I added this link eons ago.
Well, I should have. If you're visiting Concord, NH you should drop by the Concord Group Insurance Company to see their
Downing Concord Coach. Add this one along with the one in the collection of the NH Historical Society, and the one at
the Concord Monitor, and you can see three in a very short period of time. Concord is a very fortunate city in having
that many.

Click on the link below for further information.

Schoolteachers, call ahead and book a tour if your class is in Concord for
the day.

And, how could I possibly forget my very special
friends at Six Gun City in Jefferson, New Hampshire. Stop by and visit. You'll have a great time. The Brady
family are great hosts!! Check out their Concord Coach (I was there at the NH State House when they dropped by to visit
the Governor after purchasing it!)

Click on the gunslinger above for information.

July 20, 2008

Unfortunately, as with a lot of old photos, no identification
of the whereabouts of this coach was written on the back. Perhaps information will become available at some future date.

Stages at the Glen House, White Mountains, NH

On July 17, 1893 a fire broke out in the upper part of the Glen
House. Within an hour the large structure was in complete ruins.

The Glen was built in the early part of 1885 to take the place of the old
house, which was burned on the night of October 1 of the previous year.

July 1, 2008

Senter House and Stagecoaches -Center Harbor, NH

To see an Abbot-Downing Concord Coach that was made for Curtis
A. Coe, the owner of the Senter House, click on the site below for great information on the coach, now in the collection of
the Sandwich, New Hampshire Historical Society. Info on the Society can be found on my Home Page.

This Abbot-Downing Concord Coach is now on display
in the Wells Fargo Museum in Portland, Oregon. It has gone through a couple of major restorations.

As Princess Elizabeth (1951) - the future Queen Elizabeth II
took a stagecoach ride in this coach. For further information, click on Guided By History on my Home page and search
Queen Elizabeth on the Wells Fargo site. You can also Google Wells Fargo Museums for a current photo of the Abbot-Downing
Concord Coach.

This is an example of an Abbot-Downing Concord Coach that has
gone through a number of restorations instead of preservation. Thankfully, Wells Fargo has brought it back to what it
possibly looked like whcn it came out of the factory.

June 20, 2008

BOTTLED
WATER, ANYONE?

You read the name on the coach - good for you!!

150th Anniversary of Hopkinton, New Hampshire

Mr. Fitts Corser of Henniker, NH driving and Mr. Gilmore beside
him. Taken during the 150th Anniversary of Hopkinton, NH, August 29th and 30th, 1915.

June 12, 2008

Heerlen, The Netherlands

This Abbot-Downing Concord Coach found a new home in the Netherlands.
Some of you may have read about this coach in the Winter 1994 issue of The Carriage Journal. In this issue Ken Wheeling
reports that the coach, stamped #13 on the axles, was owned by Chris van Tilburg who put it on display in La Diligence,
a restaurant and carriage museum in Heerlen.

Unfortunately, Mr. van Tilburg passed away, and the last I knew, the collection
was to be sold at auction. Should I find any further information, I will share it with you.

This coach came from the Black Hills and was purchased by a New Hampshire
resident. It remained in storage until being sold to Mr. van Tilburg.

Another interesting note about the coach is that the name of the Abbot-Downing
blacksmith - Chesley - is found on the hound band. James G. Chesley, along with other veteran Abbot-Downing employees
whose average term of service to the company was 47 years, was photographed in the Deadwood Stage when Buffalo Bill brought
his Wild West to Concord, NH in 1895. You'll find a photo elsewhere on this site.

June 9, 2008

Shipment of 30 Coaches to Wells Fargo

COURTESY NEW HAMPSHIRE HISTORICAL SOCIETY

You're all familiar with this oil painting in the collection
of the New Hampshire Historical Society. I've told you that the weather wasn't as gorgeous as the painting portrays.

To my surprise, a 19" x 12 1/2" photograph went up for bid on ebay this
past week of the shipment on April 15, 1868. I have a very poor copy (including water stains) taken from either a newspaper
or magazine article in 1935. If you find a similar original photograph, hold on to it. The final bid for the photograph
was $3,608.84. Yes, that was the price. No typo!!

The photograph in the above article is the same - but the original
photograph has different graphics.

June 6, 2008

This is one of my favorite photographs. This is a Kilburn
Stereoview (1887) entitled "Homeward Bound From Vacation." This is the same Concord Coach you will find on my site in
which President Grant is shown atop the coach.

Scroll down on this page for my posting of June 15, 2007.

May 25, 2008

PHOTO COURTESY AND COPYRIGHTED BY CHUCK BOURBEAU

New
Hampshire Residents

NOTE: The restored structure shown above, formerly located
on Sugar Hill Road in Hopkinton, NH was completed for the 77th annual Hopkinton State Fair. Gordon "Skip" Rich, a Weare
barn restorer and his crew, along with their quality craftsmanship, brought this century old barn back to life at its current
site. The "Concord Coach Society" sign over the main entrance was a gift of Edward Rowse.

There were truly a number of individuals that brought about
the completion of this structure, but that will be up to the webmaster at the Concord Coach Society to fill you in.
I'm too busy as it is.

Now is the time to become a member, just before the Fair.
You'll have a wonderful time volunteering during this event. Click on Concord Coach Society below for information.

Old Sturbridge Village has purchased an excellent reproduction
of an 1838 Abbot-Downing Concord Coach. Click on below for a great article and wonderful photos.

**Once again a reporter spells Abbot wrong!!!!!
Half of the references I've consulted have done the same thing. The National Postal Museum, Carriage Museum of America
and Concord Group Insurance in Concord, NH, among others, are also guilty. To do research, use both spellings - you'll
get different results.

To mark the dedication of its new building, the Concord Monitor,
Concord, New Hampshire, undertook the restoration of Abbot-Downing Concord Coach #113. The project was undertaken by
the Monitor in order to return the coach to the people of Concord after an absence of 124 years.

The coach was discovered in a barn in western Massachusetts in 1987 by Ronald
D. Daniels, who oversaw its restoration for the Monitor.

The nine-passenger hotel coach, finished in 1866, was built to specifications
of the Sayward-Durgin Stage Company of Centre Harbor, New Hampshire.

The dedication of the new Concord Monitor building took place on January
21, 1990. When in Concord, stop by and have a look. There is another photo of the coach on my "Home Page".

Before and after photos of the Abbot-Downing Concord
Coach (#431) located at the Flume in New Hampshire. Great photos and story in the August 1964 issue of "New Hampshire
Profiles," if you can find a copy.

By 1964 the State of New Hampshire, owners of both the Flume
and #431, had a pretty shabby stage coach on its hands. And then came along Mrs. Rachel Adams, chairman of the Town
of Lincoln's Bicentennial Committee (1764-1964). If the State would let Lincoln use the coach during the festivities
that summer, the committee would underwrite the cost of a handsome restoration. The State was pleased to agree and you
can see the results of the restoration in the photo above.

May 15, 2008

This Abbot-Downing Concord Coach is in the collection of the
Yarmouth County Museum. To see another photo of it at the museum, click on the link below, scroll down, and click on
the photo of the coach for an enlargement.

Downing Concord Coach in the collection of the Museum of the
American West. (Formerly, the Autry Museum of Western Heritage.)

Los Angeles Natural History Museum

May 3, 2008

NOTE: The Kearsarge on this side of the coach

NOTE: East Branch House on this side

Here's a neat little article from the Hartford
Courant dated April 23, 1924.

Baltimore, Md. - Henry Ford has added to his collection
of relics by the purchase of an ancient stagecoach from an inn-keeper on Belair Road. The vehicle, which travelled the
roads of the White Mountains for many years, came into the possession of the inn-keeper about six years ago. It was
left at the place by a New Hampshire man, who was on his way to California, towing the coach behind his automobile.

In the vicinity of the inn, the coach broke down and F. J.
Goettner, the inn-keeper bought it. Mr. Ford saw the stagecoach when he stopped at the inn on an automobile trip last
September and began negotiations for it. The sale was recently completed and the vehicle will be shipped to Dearborn,
Michigan, today.

I want to share a few photos of this Abbot-Downing
Concord Coach. Click on the link below for photos of the coach at the Henry Ford Museum and a few surprise photos!!

PLEASE NOTE: All the photos on the site are originals and copyrighted
by Jim Steinhart. PERMISSION REQUIRED FOR USE. Please read LICENSE PHOTOS for use.

This stagecoach is decorated for a carriage parade in W. Boylston,
Massachusetts in 1908.

March 13, 2008

Special thanks to Janet Ball for sharing this stereoview
from her extensive collection of Abbot- Downing Concord Coach photos. You'll find additional photos
of this Abbot-Downing Concord Coach elsewhere on this site.

This is one of two twelve-passenger coaches ordered
by the Glen Falls and Lake George Stage Company in 1880. They also ordered a nine-passenger coach.

March 5, 2008

Courtesy of Janet Ball

There are other photos of this Downing Concord
Coach on my site, including my Home Page. For further information on the Center Sandwich, NH coach, click on the photo
above.

February 25, 2008

Cutter's Hotel, Jaffrey, NH, was formerly known as the Grand
Monadnock House, and burned to the ground in 1954.

December 28, 2007

Capt. William Banning with his Abbot-Downing Concord Coach, together
with the 1/3 scale model. The model was completed in 1936.

In 1944, Frank, a stable hand of Mr. Banning's got drunk one night in the barn and set
the place on fire when he passed out and dropped his lighted cigarette. The barn, along with the Abbot-Downing Concord
Coach, mud wagons, etc. were destroyed. Fourteen horses died in their stalls.

The miniature is in the collection of the Los Angeles County Museum.

December 24, 2007

Arcadia Publishing continues to provide us with fantastic publications
of Images of America. One of their latest is Images of America - Wells Fargo by Dr. Robert J. Chandler. This book
is available from all major booksellers, or you can contact the publishers directly. Their website is www.arcadiapublishing.com. Great chapter on stagecoaching. The book is also available at all Wells Fargo History Museums.

ca. 1905

December 13, 2007

In the Premiere Issue/Winter 2007/2008 of "Around Concord" (N.H.),
there is a feature article, with photos, on the Abbot-Downing
Concord Coach.

Of note, is a photograph of a letter from Buffalo Bill to Mr. Downing.
Whereas I am familiar with the other photos in the article, I had not seen this before.

When last I checked, their web address was not up and running, but their
address is as follows: Around Concord, 8 Old Coach Road, Bow, N.H. 03304. Price: $4.95 + shipping
and handling.

October 30, 2007

COURTESY NH HISTORICAL SOCIETY

In this issue you'll find an article on John Burgum, chief ornamental
painter for the Abbot-Downing Company. It's extremely informative and there are great color photographs.

For ordering information, click on the picture above. Then,
click on Books/Granite State History.

October 28, 2007

There are some questions regarding this photograph. The
handmade sign attached to the rail above the door reads "Annisquam." Was this coach in a parade and wanted to identify
the town it was representing? I have no information regarding O. E. Griffin, the name above the door.

Stagecoaches began service to and from Annisquam, MA in 1849 and ceased operation
in 1893 when trolleys took over.

PHOTO COURTESY OF JANET BALL

THIS PHOTO WAS TAKEN IN ORANGE COUNTY, VERMONT

October 17, 2007

This Abbot-Downing Concord Coach belonged to the Crawford House,
a grand hotel in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. It is now in the collection of the Long Island Museum (formerly
The Museums at Stony Brook).

September 1, 2007

This is a fantastic photo taken in Chelsea, VT of the South Royalton,
Tunbridge and Chelsea Stagecoach. C. E. Peters, proprietor.

August 26, 2007

The western style stagecoach shown above, attributed to Abbot-Downing,
was sold at auction by Greg Martin Auctions in June of this year for the sum of $109,250. The stagecoach had been in
storage for the last 20 years and had been owned at one time by the Parker Lyon Pony Express Museum in Arcadia, CA.

PHOTO COURTESY OF ARCADIA PUBLIC LIBRARY

PARKER LYON AND THE STAGECOACH SHOWN AT THE PONY EXPRESS MUSEUM

PHOTO COURTESY OF JANET BALL

The Kasoag Lakes Park is located in Oswego County, New York

Recently, I was checking out the NH Historical Society Gift Shop
online and noticed they have added an additional color for their Concord Coach ties. These are high quality ties and
I have both the black and the blue one. (The blue one being my favorite.) The new one (shown below) is a pale
gray. Click on the picture for information.

August 4, 2007

THIS PHOTO APPEARS TO HAVE BEEN TAKEN AT A BOY SCOUT CAMP.
UNFORTUNATELY THE LOCATION IS UNKNOWN.

SPECIAL THANKS TO JANET BALL

July 23, 2007

Farmington, Connecticut Stagecoach, 1897

PHOTO COURTESY OF AND COPYRIGHTED BY CTHISTORYONLINE.COM

July 17, 2007

JULY 10, 2007

ACCORDING TO INFORMATION ON THE REVERSE OF THIS REAL PHOTO POSTCARD
THERE IS THE POSSIBILITY THIS COACH WAS PHOTOGRAPHED IN CONTOOCOOK, NH OR THE IMMEDIATE VICINITY.

President Ulysses S. Grant is shown atop the stagecoach in this
photo taken at the Thayer Hotel, Littleton, NH in 1869.

E. K. Cox, a White Mountain stage driver took him on a wild ride through
the White Mountains, and in appreciation he presented Mr. Cox with a whip which is now in the collection of the New Hampshire
Historical Society.

There is a great article in the February, 1903 issue of "The Granite Monthly"
entitled "General Grant's Love of Horses and his Stage-Coach Ride in the White Mountains."

Mr. Thayer, the hotel owner appears to the left, behind the horses.

WARWICK, MASSACHUSETTS 1889

COLFAX, CALIFORNIA

IF THEY ONLY KNEW THEN WHAT WE KNOW NOW, THESE COACHES WOULD
NOT HAVE BEEN LEFT OUT IN A FIELD TO ROT!!